New Orleans Police Say Rats Are Eating Drug Evidence
The admission came as the agency pushed for funding. It's a reminder that the cops should spend fewer resources seizing cannabis and more on solving serious crimes.

The year is 1284. The town: Hamelin. Our hero? The Pied Piper, summoned (in that fabulous multicolored tunic, no less) by a weary mayor to play his dulcet tones and lure away the town's rats, who were eating weed seized by law enforcement.
Oh. Erm, no. The rats of the 13th century were just being annoying. It's the rats of today who are allegedly feasting on cannabis taken by police down in the land of dreams. Ah, New Orleans.
"The rats are eating our marijuana," New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) Supervisor Anne Kirkpatrick told a City Council committee on Monday. "They're all high."
A few thoughts.
Respectfully, Kirkpatrick's comments, if anything, show that some police officers may know little about the weed they seize in conjunction with their criminal investigations. That's because—unless the rodents are unwrapping and munching on edibles—they are almost certainly not, in fact, high on drugs.
"If the rats are eating raw cannabis, I would be very surprised if they are actually getting high," Matt Hill, a professor at the University of Calgary, told Axios. Heat is required to activate THC, the psychoactive compound in marijuana, said Hill, who studies rats and weed (a surprisingly robust field!). Should the rats have actually gotten high, the rodents sharing real estate with the NOPD would likely be noticeably more docile, sluggish, and less aggressive. If you've met a rat before, then you know that's better than the alternative. (Consider the COVID-19 pandemic–era rats, who reportedly became more feral without access to the abundance of trash from restaurants during lockdowns. Unsubscribe.)
Kirkpatrick's comments came as she lobbied the city to approve a move that would set the NOPD free from its aging building. A proposed 10-year lease, at a downtown high-rise, would cost taxpayers about $7.6 million in base rent. The agency's current building is reportedly in disrepair and teeming with rodents and roaches, so fair enough. But perhaps the police could prepare for that cash withdrawal by spending fewer resources seizing cannabis and more on solving serious crimes. In 2018, for example, police solved less than half of "crimes against persons"—offenses where there was a victim—a statistic that has remained dire as the years have gone on.
There's also always Plan B: the Pied Piper. So if you see a flamboyant man dancing down Bourbon Street, playing the flute and followed by a line of rats, then there are two possibilities: Kirkpatrick did not succeed, unfortunately, in getting the new lease. Or it's Mardi Gras. Enjoy!
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"Where's all the weed in evidence go?"
"Umm, the rats ate it? Uh, yeah, that's it. The rats ate it."
Came here to say exactly the same thing.
I could have smoked that pot… And shot those rats.
Next year's surprise hit movie: Cocaine Rats
No... don't give them ideas.
At the Mardi Grass.
I don't think it is rats getting at the weed, and other illegal drugs.
There is another animal from the New Orleans Zoo that is a more likely culprit.
This reminded me of an event early in my locksmithing career.
The courthouse called needing one of their evidence safes opened. The trial was that day and no one remembered the combination for the safe filled with cocaine.
hahahahah
Really? Were you able to crack the safe? [pun intended]
Actually we sent another guy over. I was on probation for the sale of Marihuana at the time. Didn't figure the court wanted to see me.
He had a Die Hard moment when it opened. Ode to Joy and all as the door swung open. Unfortunately they did not believe he had a prescription to fill.
In 2018, for example, police solved less than half of “crimes against persons”—offenses where there was a victim—a statistic that has remained dire as the years have gone on.
That requires actual work, and there’s no profit. They can’t take cash and cars when there’s a victim. They have to find the stuff and give it back. Where’s the fun in that? Makes more sense to team up with the feds and equitably share all the assets of people who commit victimless crimes.
I wonder what Billy thinks "pied" means.
You mean he's not clad in meat pasties?
Perhaps he spelled pie-eyed wrong?
I think they meant to say pigs were getting into the evidence.
"Our" marijuana.
>(Consider the COVID-19 pandemic–era rats, who reportedly became more feral without access to the abundance of trash from restaurants during lockdowns. Unsubscribe.)
Yes, I would like to unsubscribe from the feral rats please.
Or Houston: “250,000 crime victims in Houston never even had their crime investigated."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/gov-greg-abbott-calls-for-consequences-for-264000-suspended-houston-police-cases/ar-BB1jzrtV
Oh, wait. Houston, New Orleans ... Deep Blue cities. Never mind ...
Texas, Louisiana....deep red states that believe they the more criminals that have access to guns, the better.
Okay, so you make up this thing about rats, you take the drugs, and you sell them. Oh, but the mayor would have no part in that !!!
Pontalba apartment
First-class travel
Forward Together: Cantrell started a nonprofit called Forward Together, but had to shut it down this year after the inspector general questioned two contracts that sent city money to her charity
Smart Cities: A now-abandoned project to increase public internet access in New Orleans caused another scandal for Cantrell. A City Council investigation found evidence of potential contract-rigging, ethics violations and perjury by city official
Cantrell has also had several other big problems to deal with during her two terms, including the collapse of the Hard Rock Hotel, the COVID-19 pandemic, an increase in violent crime, trash contract kerfuffles and the consent decree that governs the New Orleans Police Department.
In other words, a Democrat.
why aren't they selling it out the back door like everyone else?
"New Orleans Police Say Rats Are Eating Drug Evidence."
Well, this excuse is at least more original than the old stand by, "The dog at the evidence."
Gonna need to start showing ID when buying rat and mouse traps? Gonna need to impose limits on how many you can buy at one time?
Binion, were *you* high when you wrote this?
Seems a never ending spiral. Rats eat cannabis, rats get the munchies, rats eat more cannabis, lather, rinse, repeat.
If I may say, something smells funny about this story.
Are you Danish? Did you order a Danish?
"There's also always Plan B: the Pied Piper. So if you see a flamboyant man dancing down Bourbon Street, playing the flute and followed by a line of rats...."
Any chance of having Mr. Piper dance down the street toward the Mississippi followed by a long line of New Orleans politicians?
No rats in my NYC neighborhood. We are overrun with street cats. The rats know better than to go near our block.
More seriously, this is a culture war thing. Never seen as decadent a place as Bourbon Street. One of the few places on the entire US you can drink alcohol in public. And that is the least of the decadence. But marijuana isn't acceptable to the moralists.
New York was the first state to go all in on mass incarceration for minor drug offences. The result was a massive increase in violent crime. Repeal of those laws resulted in a huge reduction in violent crime and a lot of savings to taxpayers as prison after prison got closed. Not good for the corrections officer union though.
Houston and New Orleans have homicide rates that are multiples of what we have here in NYC. Maybe the red states should admit that they got it wrong. NY did.
New Orleans has had complete Democratic rule (not a SINGLE GOP elected official) since the 1800's. The state of Louisiana has been a Democrat run state from those times until recently AND is still mostly Democrat run today.
There's also always Plan B: the Pied Piper. So if you see a flamboyant man dancing down Bourbon Street, playing the flute and followed by a line of rats and government employees.
Wait, is that redundant?
"Rats and government employees" is not redundant, although it may be quite difficult to distinguish the two groups.